It would be nice if they went after the people which huge portfolios of houses that they rent out, but I suppose that would affect a good number of MP's so that's not going to happen.
What's the practical difference of an actual social tax, and a structural situation where young people pay more than older people, in such a way that their act of paying actually transfers wealth to those older people?
And if a proposed tax on the old might help address this wealth transfer, why should it be considered 'unfair'?
So what's the practical difference? It's still money out of the hands of the young, and wealth into the hands of the old.A tax would be explicitly set and collected by government.
That's still not a practical difference. The young are still just as poor, the old are still just as wealthy, and the outlay the young have to meet, in housing terms, is still contributing to that elderly wealth.The Government are not private hands is what (or to continue your analogy, "The Government" != "The old people".) Stop looking at it from such a self centred viewpoint please.
heh, get an accountant, they aren't very expensive for personal taxes at all. I ay about $200 to get my tax returns done.God I wish I could get an accountant to lift me out of paying to these ******* cretins.
Loving the simplistic view of the current state of taxation on this thread.
The Telegraph did an interesting piece recently about how the marginal rate of tax can be 10,000% when looking at the withdrawal of child benefit, withdrawing the personal allowance over 100k and the reduction in pension allowance over 150k. Plus the impact of National Insurance bands added to Income Tax making for an already highly taxed workforce.
If Corbyn did get in an whacked up the taxes for people on higher incomes, it'll be easier to convince my wife that a move to the states would be good for us, so that will be less tax for UKplc.
I think the best way to make the system fairer is to reduce the tax on earned income and instead tax assets such as land and property which cannot be hidden.
You either have a bizarre and completely incorrect definition of practical, or a bizarre and completely blinkered view on the world.That's still not a practical difference. The young are still just as poor, the old are still just as wealthy, and the outlay the young have to meet, in housing terms, is still contributing to that elderly wealth.
Read back to where this started.
they already have - see mortgage interest relief changes, stamp duty changes etc..
Don't expect to pay less tax in the US unless you are a very high income earner, you need to be pulling in about $150-200K a year before you see real savings. At less than $100K you may find yourself paying more taxes in the US. Once you add federal, state, local, poperty and social taxes you will find a marginal rate higher than the UK with a lower personal allowance. State and Federal income tax will put you at 40% at least .
If you really want to lower your taxes move to Switzerland.
I'm referring to it from the perspective of the citizens in question. the young have less cash through the transaction, and whether it is an actual tax or a structural pseudo tax makes no practical difference.You either have a bizarre and completely incorrect definition of practical, or a bizarre and completely blinkered view on the world.
The Government would receive the money instead of private hands. That is the practical difference. Spelled out in clear and plain language. Yet you choose to ignore that and claim there is still no practical difference.
Mortgage interest tax relief only hit the chaps with a few houses, anyone with loads had them wrapped in an ltd, and wasn’t affected.
If i was in a position to buy another, i’d certainly do it from the bounds of an ltd.
I'm referring to it from the perspective of the citizens in question. the young have less cash through the transaction, and whether it is an actual tax or a structural pseudo tax makes no practical difference.
Whether the government takes the cash or not is not a practical implication, in the same way as to whom you pay your energy bills makes no practical difference, if pay you must.
Sounds like Semantics again to me.Except it isn’t a tax, irrespective of the same outcome being reached. Relevant in a thread where government taxation is being discussed.
House crash? What house crash?Also there seems to be an opinion that exists that those over fourty had it easy.
I think folks have missed a generation somewhere.
Someone who is fourty, who bought at the age of say 25, has resided in a house boom and crash that negated any net benefit from housing. We have had a ten year period where wages have barely increased.
People at fourty are not significantly better off that those at 25.
They,ve also started working when most pensions kicked in at 60, yet now find, certain if it is a govt scheme, that they won’t receive their pension until stat, which for them is now 68.
At least those at twenty can have a bloody good idea that they’ll be working to 70. Rather than assume they will retire with their pension when they expected to.
I think any gap or division is set more for those who into their fifties, likely 55 and above.
They will find it hard to find a tax solution for the older groups that doesn’t smash the middle - yet again...
So it is the terribly blinkered view I first suspected. Ok.I'm referring to it from the perspective of the citizens in question. the young have less cash through the transaction, and whether it is an actual tax or a structural pseudo tax makes no practical difference.
Whether the government takes the cash or not is not a practical implication, in the same way as to whom you pay your energy bills makes no practical difference, if pay you must.
How is it blinkered?So it is the terribly blinkered view I first suspected. Ok.